clean water projects around the world

Over the past decades, Hope Bridge Foundation has forged the way in water and sanitation provision. Our water engineers are renowned for their speed and efficiency, providing large-scale water supplies and disease-preventing sanitation facilities to millions of vulnerable people in the world, even in the most challenging environments.

Working alongside partners on the ground, we are committed to developing innovative, long-term and cost-effective solutions that are tailored to each community’s unique needs and can reduce levels of poverty and disease.

Clean water is not just a luxury to some, it’s a seeming impossibility. Providing clean water and access to sanitation where they’re needed is an essential part of our humanitarian work. And it all starts with constantly searching for new, ground-breaking ideas that work well now and stand the test of time.

Desalination units in Somalia and Yemen

As in the entire Horn of Africa area, due to climate change droughts are becoming more recurrent and more severe in Somalia. The population, mostly pastoralist and nomadic, has lost its livestock and with it, their livelihoods.

Hope Bridge Foundation aims to strengthen the communities’ recovery capacities against the impacts of limited access to safe water. It includes providing innovative and sustainable solutions such as the installation of water desalination systems activated with solar energy.

Brackish (high saline) water is an increasingly common problem. In some communities underground sources contain salt and sandy water. The plant allows filtrating this contaminated water and converting it into fresh and drinking water for the local community as well as people fleeing the drought.

The longest ever water pipeline in Democratic Republic of Congo

The Fizi territory in the South Kivu region, DRC, is one of the most inaccessible places. As the population has grown, so has the demand for water, putting pressure on the few existing water infrastructures in the area. Most of the water sources and wells have been damaged during armed conflicts. Families are forced to consume unsafe water from stagnant sources, that puts them at the risk of contracting deadly water-borne diseases such as cholera.

Hope Bridge Foundation in partnership with senior organizations started the construction of a more than 100-kilometers-long gravity-fed water supply system, that taps into a river source in Mitumba mountain ranges. As far as we know this pipeline is one of the longest ever to be installed by an NGO. Once completed, this pipe will provide safe water to more than 80,000 people across the main surrounding towns.

Solar water treatment plants in South Sudan

In South Sudan, one in two people don’t have access to clean water. Many use river water for cooking and drinking, causing water-borne diseases like typhoid and cholera. Oxfam has built a new solar-powered water treatment plant in the Gumbo area of Juba.

The plant produces a minimum of 300 m3 per day and serves an estimated 15,000 people with drinking water. It was designed to be easy to operate and require minimal maintenance and spare parts. It doesn’t depend on fuel, which is expensive and in short supply in South Sudan. There is a complete distribution network, including three water kiosks and a water truck filling station. Oxfam is training community members to look after and maintain their own water supply.

Gravity water supply system in Nepal

In Nepal, the 2015 earthquake damaged many water sources in rural villages located in the mountains, like in Dhading district. The earthquake caused the underground water supply to move and communities’ existing water supplies to completely dry up. People were forced to leave their homes due to the lack of access to water. 

To bring water back to the community in an even more accessible way, Oxfam built a gravity water supply system to support 266 households (1,500 people), as well as three schools. Taps are connected to their homes and women no longer have to go and collect water as they did before the earthquake.

Beating poverty with water for all

We have a vision of a world where everyone has safe clean water to drink. A world where every single person has access to decent sanitation. A world where no one’s life is threatened by deadly waterborne diseases.

Pioneering ideas have the power to change countless lives for the better. With your support, we’ll continue to innovate to achieve a just world without poverty.

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